86 This is Carla's and Kevin's card. Their ski lodge has a view like this. # ..."....:.....::.: )< I ...."...: '. ;I ! . rtu:.< ": ' ...: ., <ot '. ".:<;;: """l ',<- w.. Y'" . :: :t . '''' ;-2 _ m ?: ....,., ",l . ";:" v. 0( ..... ..:-" .:'. . ....:. ", : :;:.::: :.<. ',-: :::v.' ',., .' ",=,,:, . " t \ _<. 4. / ' ... >'u, <... p"'f ...... v^ :'.':::': ("::. :.:.:':. ." ... j: :i:: :::. ::' ': ,; " 1: 7' ,,>,Ø . : ., <, " : ": "* 4' .. " Yã< " < t({ )f,.$.""v .. t " ,,, p ..:...... ......,0. .... , Y' "" ... ''t', ..... "> " '\..., '" *": ::::(. .:::..- ,Y ., , . +K:.:,:::: ':::' :' ,,, ...<*.-:'-:: :.:- t : (::.I. : L '= .ø ".4s :.' ', "::y;. . ... ... .... ". ...." ....... ".". :$: "" : Vi ,> , ,,":". ..:>".. . ,. .I'N -.,. "'^_.. ...... ""'OX-.........N.. YNV__ :".. -:-...."..Y.+..NVY\lIN'JY ë... i m ;... :"-;N'7:".- -4 .:::::::::::r: :_t?:-:'"'. w ...... . . F )> ." Onglnal Painting by Adolf Dehn. ""' One of the 426 American Artists Group Christmas Cards. At B. Altttlan & Co. '- -:: > 'r and at other stores, too, where Y ou'd ex pec t to find them. --; I- ê $ " j<, , " t' '';'" <t' " , ,N ,, . , <f' .;.t-. ' ri" \i ... l " I;.r .:.' , ' .., " .., ,it ..-.. / .:<" ;), .....-'. , <, t: . ' ':", ;" >. : \. , < - :;. ",! t ,'! $ ...* . "" ... '( ': \ ,'5. ,. " (, '", : " .,., ; , t é# :T 7f i de j mætkaatftl UßMJUtn are about equal to the Los Angeles Mex- icans, but their pattern of settlement is very different. The 1960 census re- ported l./os Angeles County to contain 461,546 Negroes and 576,716 people with Spanish surnames-the only way that people of Mexican origin are identified. (It is an imperfect way, be- cause it takes in thousands of Cubans, Puerto Ricans, and other Spanish ...Ameri- cans, and because it leaves out Mexican }\mericans who have acquired Anglo names through marriage or by choice.) Besides these two groups, there were 123,359 "other non-white," more than half of them Japanese. These minurities added up to nineteen and a quarter per cent of Los Angeles Coun- ty's population in 1960, and they were all growIng faster than the Anglo- Caucasian majority. The Negroes were Increasing faster than the Spanish- surname people (111.8 per cent since 1950, as against 10 (). 5), although the la tter are still helieved to be more n u- merous. In any event, the Negroes tend to live much more in the urban parts of the county than the Mexicans, with their bent for farming and the open country. Although the Negroes have a slightly higher educational standing than the Mexicans, they have lower family in- comes and a higher percentage of un- employment. In addition, their choice of places to live is infinitely more limited According to the County Com- mission on Human Relations, Los ...An- geles, at the time of th e last official census, was more strictly segregated than any Southern city in the United States and had fewer Negroes living in the suburbs than any big Northern city except Chicago or Cleveland. Los An- geles has five small, peripheral Negro ghettos, but the main one stretches for ten miles south from the center of the city. The heartland of this ghetto is the subcommunIty of \\T atts, where last year's rioting started. The popula- tion of \Vatts is at least ninety per cent Negro; some of its schools have a nearly hundred-per-cent egro en- rollment. The population is fluid, though. The more successful members of it depart when they can, leaving the less successful behind, and these have been joined by infl uxes of Negroes from the Southeast, many of them of the unsophisticated field-hand type that has had trouble in the Northern cities. Such trouble is especially bad in this technologically oriented city, with its insistence upon literacy in jobholders, and, besides, there is the automobile questIon. \Vatts is about seven miles south of downtown I.1eA. and almost